Tag Archives: mission of God

I have been waiting for a publication like this for quite some time, and have been encouraged and inspired so far by what I have read.

For those of who unaware of Immerse, here is some brief information on it.

A note from Chris Folmsbee regarding Immerse:

“Each article is meant to help youth workers in whatever context they might find themselves working to help guide students into spiritual formation for the mission of God. Immerse is about providing youth workers with theologically robust, soul-caring and genuinely practiced tools for contextualizing the mission of God. ”

He could not have said that any better, and three issues from it birth, Immerse has proven itself true to its vision and hopes.

What I have discovered in Immerse is new ideas, theological insights, spiritual direction and formation, and an emphasis on historical and ecumenical Christianity rooted in biblical narrative of missio Dei (the mission of God)

What I also have appreciated is that under the guidance of Chris and the executive director Mike King, Immerse is providing a voice for new thinkers and youth workers. While I have always appreciated the “experts” speaking into youth ministry issues, it has long been an issue of mine that those individuals are “the” voice of youth ministry. They are the ones who speak at conferences and, until now, they are the ones writing for all the youth ministry magazines and books. I get it. They have years of experience and wisdom and we can learn a great deal. But what about younger, fresher voices? There has not been a platform for the unseen youth workers until Immerse jumped into the seen.

Sure, Immerse has and will continue to seek input from veterans (as they should), but will also provide all types of youth workers and thinkers a voice. In the past few years, I have met numerous young youth workers who have amazing theological insights to youth ministry. Some have collaborated on some writing with me and others I hope to work with in the future. Though less “experienced” than even myself, these men and woman understand contemporary teen culture and the interplay of contextual Christianity and, I also believe represent where youth ministry is heading in the future.

Immerse, and youth ministry leaders such as Chris and Mike are progressive, forward thinking, yet still grounded and rooted in historical and biblical Christianity. I appreciate them as friends and as believers in the emerging generation of youth workers. They believe in the Church, the future of youth ministry, and the hope and dream of God for the world.

Immerse is a good read for youth workers of all types, and finally ones who are really interested in the interplay of theology and youth ministry.

Our theology influences and impacts how and why we minister to teens. It helps determine what we teacher, how we teacher, what kind of environment we hope to create, the type of faith community we strive to build with our teens, why we do “missions” or service trips, and what we hope to accomplish while on them.

This past year I attended a conference in MN focussing on this same interconnectedness. You can read my thoughts here

*This book sets the bar for creating a theological and historical foundation for God’s presence in youth ministry. The book shows how classic disciplines, symbols, and practices can shape the worldviews, virtues, and habits of young people today. “If Brother Lawrence had been a youth pastor, this book would have been his favorite resource.” – Kendra Dean

This past weekend, I drove to PA farm country with my wife to celebrate her college homecoming and reunion. ( I will get in trouble if I mention how many years…)

We had a great time and it was thrilling for me to meet so many of her friends that I had heard stories about. I was amazed watching my wife relive her time at college and the hilarious journeys and escapades her friends always seemed to get into. We all sat around for hours swapping stories of days gone by and how each person met one another. There was a wonderful familiarity, fondness, and closeness that permeated the conversations.

These memories were exhilarating for me to hear and even more so for this group of friends to share. Their eyes would light up and brilliant smiles would adorn their faces as they recounted these cherished moments. Some made them laugh, others reflect, a few stories brought tears, but they all brought these friends closer together. Though now living spread throughout the country, the re-telling of these shared stories fused them and brought them back to the beginning. Back in time to a place and space they all loved.

Good stories do that, don’t they. We love stories because of the power and influence they have on us. Stories often “bring us back” to places, people, and times long ago, and sometimes long-lost. We yearn for these memories and moments because they remind us of our roots, a place of fondness, familiarity, and grounding in an ever-changing world around us. Old photos or videos can do that. Music has that same ability, as down seeing certain people again, a stroll down memory lane, or simply visiting places from the past. My wife and I were able to to take a beautiful 4 mile drive down the winding back-country roads she used to run. We saw her old door room, cafeteria, and chapel. We even watched a soccer game from the stands she used to watch as a student _____ years ago! Her school won 5-0 if you wanted to know!

As I sat there over the weekend with my wife’s friends (whom I now consider my friends as well), I thought about my college friends. Every time we get together we continually rehash the old stories of our “glory” days playing baseball. Well, they weren’t really glory days, but you know how time passes and stories become much grander….

There is something magical when we get together. Our wives say that we turn back into childish college kids once again (although I don’t think it is intended as a compliment).

I love to hear and retell the stories of baseball games we won and lost, our trips to Florida for spring break, the crazy assistant coach we once had, our trips into Boston on the weekends, and the times I would house sit down the road from campus.

Year after year we re-tell the same exact stories, and never grow tired of them. In fact, I would argue that these stories actually grow in interest, enthusiasm, and sometimes exaggeration as the years go by and help us grow closer as friends. No matter what happens in our lives: divorce, loss of jobs, tough pregnancies, miscarriages, financial troubles, we will always have these stories, and thus we will always have each other. And that is a very powerful and present reality.

Donald Miller writes in his book A Million Miles in a Thousand Years that we are each given a story to live out. The only question is what kind of story are we living? Are we living interesting stories? Stories that we will be re-telling 10, 20, and 50 years down the road.

As youth workers, are we helping and inspiring our students to live out the full potential of their story?

Are we telling them good stories that they will want to re-tell to others?

One of the reasons why the Christian faith interests me so, is the reality that I am part of a much bigger (and really exciting) story of God. The Bible helps narrate this story as lived out over time through generations of faithful people of God. By the telling and re-telling of these Bible stories, we are connected to The Story and reminded of our roots. A sense of familiarity, closeness, and home can be experienced as we share these stories of faith and faithful people from times ago.

It is like sitting around with old friends and remembering why you are such good friends to begin with. Or like remembering when you first met your spouse and how exciting those moments were and then living today in that same reality and presence.

Just as it is important to re-tell stories, it is also crucial to always be making new ones. If my wife’s friends got together every few years and only told stories of the past, I wonder how deep their friendships would or could grow? And how long would those friendships be able to last?

If my friends and I got together and only relived our “glory” days, then our friendship would eventually become only a thing in the past. These memories and moments could be looked upon as historical events that were signficant at the time, but no longer. The friendships eventually would cease to have much meaning and significance to the person I am today and am becoming.

In some ways, we view our faith like that at times. As youth workers, we teach the Biblical stories that way, as more of historical events of faith that used to happen ie, how God used to work in and through his people. We want our students to know the stories (and sometimes memorize where they can find them in the Bible), but seldom do our students feel and experience the stories. Now, if we are good story-tellers we may captivate our students’ attention for a while with stories of faith, but at the end of the day, they are seen as little more than just stories that have no real bearing on life today.

However, what friends have inherent in them is the ability to create new stories each time they are together. This past weekend, as the stories of old were being shared, an entire new story was unfolding before our eyes. I have no doubt that 10 years from now, we will look back on this weekend with fondness, laughter, and maybe even a childish college smirk.

Likewise, my friends and I are actively making new stories. For awhile after college, we made pilgrimages down to Florida for spring training, but now instead of playing the game we love we watched our beloved Boson Red Sox. Time has passed and our lives are different (so long to Florida!) but we still make a point to meet up a few times a year and the legacy of foolishness increases each time!

As youth workers, we also need to be creating new stories of faith, a faith that is real, active, alive, and exciting.

We should be great story-tellers of the faith of old and at the same time be journeying with our students in forming new stories of faith lived out in community. Faith not simply found in pages in a book from people of the past, but a faith that is encouraged and inspired to live out great stories just like as in the “glory” days.

God was, and still is on a mission of redemption and we have an active role in The Story. God is actively bringing this world to its intended purpose of wholeness, completion, and salvation. This story has a beginning and will have an ending, but it is not fully written….not yet. We are part of the story. We are in the story. We are the story.

People will look back on our lives 10, 100, or maybe 1,000 years from now and see a story. What kind of story will they see? In our faith journey as youth workers, are we encouraging ourselves and students to live a full, robust, active, and exciting story?

I honestly hope that the best is yet to come for my friends and I, and the same for my wife and her friends from college.

And I equally hope and pray that the best is yet to come in our Story.

May our stories be more exciting and awe-inspiring tomorrow then they were yesterday.

We may build upon the legacy of faith we have been given and add to it each day.

May we remember well and respect the stories of the past as they keep us grounded, rooted, and united as part of one family and group of friends.

And may they inspire us to create and live out new stories each day that will be looked upon with great joy and fondness when we have one final homecoming and reunion and our Story has its last curtain call.